odio et atia

odio et atia
See de odio et atia.

Ballentine's law dictionary. . 1998.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • odio et atia — /6wd(i)yow et eysh(iy)a/ See de odio et alia …   Black's law dictionary

  • writ de odio et atia — /rit diy owdiyow ed eysh(iy)a/ See de odio et atia …   Black's law dictionary

  • atia — /eysh(iy)a/ Hatred or ill will. See de odio et atia …   Black's law dictionary

  • atia — /eysh(iy)a/ Hatred or ill will. See de odio et atia …   Black's law dictionary

  • de odio et atia — /diy owdiyow ed eysh(iy)a/ A writ anciently called breve de bono et malo, addressed to the sheriff to inquire whether a man committed to prison upon suspicion of murder were committed on just cause of suspicion, or only upon malice and ill will… …   Black's law dictionary

  • de odio et atia — /diy owdiyow ed eysh(iy)a/ A writ anciently called breve de bono et malo, addressed to the sheriff to inquire whether a man committed to prison upon suspicion of murder were committed on just cause of suspicion, or only upon malice and ill will… …   Black's law dictionary

  • de odio et atia — For hatred and ill will,–an ancient writ which was directed to the sheriff, commanding him to inquire whether a prisoner charged with murder was committed upon just cause of suspicion, or merely propter odium et atiam, for hatred and ill will. If …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • tradas in ballium — Deliver you to bail, a writ which lay to admit to bail a person who had been found under a writ de odio et atia to have been maliciously imprisoned. See de odio et atia. In its broadest significance, any bargain or sale. See May v Rice, 101 US… …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • tradas in ballium — /treydas in bsliyam/ You deliver to bail. In old English practice, the name of a writ which might be issued in behalf of a party who, upon the writ de odio et atia, had been found to have been maliciously accused of a crime, commanding the… …   Black's law dictionary

  • writ — A written judicial order to perform a specified act, or giving authority to have it done, as in a writ of mandamus or certiorari, or as in an original writ for instituting an action at common law. A written court order or a judicial process,… …   Black's law dictionary

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